College Hall of Fame to welcome '63 Loyola champs

Captains Jerry Harkness of Loyola and Joe Dan Gold of Mississippi State were the center of attention nearly fifty years ago when their two teams met in a 1963 NCAA regional game in East Lansing, Mich. It was the first time a Mississippi State team had played against blacks. The 1963 Loyola team is being inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in November.Photo courtesy of Loyola University Chicago athlet

Members of the 1963 Loyola NCAA men's basketball championship team cheer on current Loyola player Christian Thomas (32) as he is announced before game between Loyola and Mississippi State last December. The 1963 Loyola team is being inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.Associated Press

By Daily Herald News Services

Fifty years after knocking off the University of Cincinnati to capture the NCAA championship, the 1963 Loyola University Chicago men's basketball team will be inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame on Nov. 24 in Kansas City, Mo.

The 1963 Ramblers will be the first team to be enshrined in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.

Also part of the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2013 are players Tom McMillen (Maryland), Bill Walton (UCLA), Marques Johnson (UCLA), and Bob Hopkins (Grambling State); coaches Gene Keady (Purdue) and Rollie Massimino (Villanova); and contributors George Raveling (Nike) and George Killian (FIBA).

"The induction of our team into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame is a tremendous honor for all of us," said center Les Hunter, a member of the 1963 Loyola team. "Loyola helped tear down the color barrier in college basketball and our national championship game against Cincinnati, which was the first nationally televised NCAA title game, showed that the brand of black basketball was exciting and it provided for more exposure and recruiting for future players. We are very proud and humbled by this great honor."

Under the direction of legendary head coach George Ireland, the 1963 Ramblers, who were led by a starting lineup known as the "Iron Five," played an electrifying style of basketball and led the nation in scoring with 92.3 points per game after opening the season ranked No. 3 in The Associated Press Poll. Loyola, which began the year by winning 20 consecutive games, earned the program's first NCAA Tournament berth and promptly set a record for margin of victory in a 111-42 over Tennessee Tech in the opening round.

Despite the team's NCAA championship, it may be remembered most for its role in an NCAA Regional contest against Mississippi State, which later became known as the Game of Change. On that important day -- March 15, 1963 -- Loyola and Mississippi State played a game that changed college basketball and integration in the South. The Ramblers had a starting lineup that featured four African-Americans and the all-white Mississippi State team had previously been unable to compete in postseason play against integrated teams due to an unwritten state law. Loyola won that historic contest, 61-51, behind 20 points from two-time All-America selection Jerry Harkness, and would go on to win the 1963 NCAA Championship.

Loyola knocked off two-time defending champion Cincinnati in the title game by staging one of the most memorable comebacks in NCAA Tournament history as it erased a 15-point deficit with just 10 minutes remaining in regulation to force overtime. Vic Rouse's tip-in of a missed shot as the buzzer sounded in overtime gave the Ramblers a 60-58 victory and the chance to call themselves champions, and to this day, Loyola remains the only school from the state of Illinois to have won the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship.

Induction ceremonies for the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame will take place on Sunday, November 24, at the Midland Theatre in Kansas City as part of a three-day celebration of college basketball.

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